Instagram celebrities seem to exist within their weird bubble, where they have simultaneously attracted hundreds of thousands (and sometimes millions) of followers, yet the majority will have still never heard of them. It certainly appears to be a lucrative career path, with those who gain a following on the social image sharing site able to land product placement deals worth thousands of dollars, earning more than some people do in an entire month just by posting one image of them wearing a pair of TopShop jeans, or sipping on a weight loss shake.
Essena O’Neill decided to uncover the lives of those behind the idealistic Instagram photos earlier this week, with the self-proclaimed Instagram model shedding some light on the hard work that actually goes into making your life look “perfect” in order to attract the kind of brand deals and online notoriety that leads to these young, attractive individuals forging a career out of little more than a few selfies and snapshots of them wearing a bikini.
With over 600,000 followers, the 19-year-old Australian student decided to leave Instagram after admitting that she had become “obsessed” with people liking her, choosing to change the captions of her Instagram posts in order to represent the grim reality of what could easily have been misconstrued as a young woman enjoying her seemingly care-free life. After branding our current social media-focused world the “brainwashed generation,” she uploaded a YouTube video (which has since been deleted) to announce that she would be removing all of her social media accounts, but not before revealing what she really thought of the life that had garnered her so much attention on the Internet.
Check out the Instagram images along with Essena’s edited captions in the gallery below:
However, Essena’s decision to delete her social media presence was not without purpose, as she followed it up by debuting her new website Let’s Be Game Changers. While Essena has come under criticism for what is perceived as a thinly veiled marketing move rather than a real push away from social media (her claim that she’s going “off the grid” despite now posting videos on DailyMotion and starting up her own website indicate a lack of understanding in regards to what going off the grid actually means), let’s consider this for a second:
She is 19 years old.
Regardless of whether or not this is all a big self-promotional ploy, let us not forget that she is
19 years old.
Most teenagers would give their left leg to be able to have 600,000 followers on Instagram at that age, so Essena shutting down the accounts that made her so much money in order to create a website devoted to openly discussing the bleak ins-and-outs of social media, and deconstructing the “illusion” of the perfect lives lived by those attached to these aspirational Instagram accounts, is commendable and in its own way quite brave.
Despite Essena now coming under criticism from both her former followers, fans, friends and individuals who had never even heard of her prior to this debacle, perhaps head-hunting a 19-year-old who is trying to break free of the ever-judgmental gaze of social media in order to make some sort of impact within her own, Internet-obsessed world isn’t the most reasonable course of action here.
Good luck, Essena.
Essena O'Neill
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Essena O'Neill #1
"PLEASE VALIDATE MY EFFORTS TO LOOK SEXY WITH MY BUM BEING THE POINT OF THIS PHOTO." I wish someone would have shook me and said "You have so much more in you than your sexuality" at 16. That was all I thought others wanted, that's what got likes, that's what I thought was cool. There is nothing cool about this. This is a photo taken for the sake of trying to get people to like a photo. There is nothing inspiring about that. Social media is an illusion.
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Essena O'Neill #2
Not real life. Only reason we went to the beach this morning was to shoot these bikinis because the company paid me and also I looked good to society's current standards. I was born and won the genetic lottery. Why else would I have uploaded this photo? Read between the lines, or ask yourself "why does someone post a photo... What is the outcome for them? To make a change? Look hot? Sell something? I thought I was helping young girls get fit and healthy. But I only realised at 19 that placing any amount of self worth on your physical form is so limiting! I could have been writing, exploring, playing, anything beautiful and real... Not trying to validate my worth through a bikini shot with no substance
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Essena O'Neill #3
NOT REAL LIFE - paid $$$ to promote both the jeans and top.
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Essena O'Neill #4
and yet another photo taken purely to promote my 16 year old body. This was my whole identity. That was so limiting. Made me incredibly insecure. You have no idea.
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Essena O'Neill #5
NOT REAL LIFE - I didn't pay for the dress, took countless photos trying to look hot for Instagram, the formal made me feel incredibly alone.
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Essena O'Neill #6
Was paid $400 to post a dress. That's when I had maybe 150k followers, with half a million followers, I know of many online brands (with big budgets) that pay up to $2000 per post. Nothing is wrong with accepting brand deals. I just think it should be known. This photo had no substance, it was not of ethical manufacturing (I was uneducated at the time). SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT REAL is my point. Be aware what people promote, ask yourself, what's their intention behind the photo?
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Essena O'Neill #7
Edit real caption: This is what I like to call a perfectly contrived candid shot. Nothing is candid about this. While yes going for a morning jog and ocean swim before school was fun, I felt the strong desire to pose with my thighs just apart #thighgap boobs pushed up #vsdoublepaddingtop and face away because obviously my body is my most likeable asset. Like this photo for my efforts to convince you that I'm really really hot